Questions that science may help to answer. This module offers opportunities to develop mathematics skills. For example:

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1 3.3.1 Module P1: The Earth in the Universe Overview Scienti c discoveries in the solar system and beyond continue to inspire popular culture and affect our understanding of our place in the Universe. In this module, candidates explore the scale of the Universe and its past, present and future, and consider the ideas scientists have and their evidence for them. Closer to home, candidates consider long-term and short-term changes in the Earth s crust, and how these changes impact on human life. In particular, they nd out about earthquakes and volcanoes explaining them, predicting them and coping with them. The module focuses on how we know the things we think we know about the Earth and its place in the Universe. Across the whole module, candidates encounter many examples showing relationships between data and explanations. Through these contexts they learn about the way scientists communicate and develop new explanations. Issues for citizens How do we know about things we can barely see? How do scientists develop explanations of the Earth and space? Why do mountains come in chains, in particular places? Can we predict earthquakes, especially those that are likely to cause most damage? Questions that science may help to answer Where do the elements of life come from? What do we know about the Universe? How have the Earth s continents moved, and with what consequences? Opportunities for mathematics This module offers opportunities to develop mathematics skills. For example: develop a sense of scale, including: size from the size of the Earth to that of the solar system and the Universe; speed from the movement of tectonic plates to the speed of light; and time from the age of the Earth to the age of the Universe carry out calculations using experimental data, including nding the mean and the range use ideas of inverse proportion in the context of wavelength and frequency use equations, including appropriate units for physical quantities. 10

2 Opportunities for practical work This module offers opportunities for practical work in teaching and learning. For example: use diffraction gratings to look at a variety of spectra measure distances using parallax investigate the relationship between brightness of a light source and distance from the source model the rock cycle and the movement of tectonic plates model the changing magnetic pattern on the sea oor explore the build up of forces that precede a brickquake explore transverse and longitudinal waves on a slinky spring. Opportunities for ICT This module offers opportunities to illustrate the use of ICT in science. For example: computer modelling of galaxies in collision creating a 3D model of the large-scale structure of the Universe from individual galaxy observations processing data on movements of the Earth s lithosphere (as evidence to support the theory of plate tectonics) analysing wave re ections in seismic explorations. Use of ICT in teaching and learning can include: animations to illustrate the movement of continents as they are carried by tectonic plates using the internet to research particular geohazards video clips to show examples of wave motion animation to show the behaviour of waves in ripple tanks modelling software to investigate the implications of the wave equation. 11

3 Module P1: The Earth in the Universe Ideas about Science Module P1 provides opportunities to develop candidates understanding of these Ideas about Science 3 Developing scienti c explanations Candidates should understand that: A candidate who understands this can, for example: 3.1 scienti c hypotheses, explanations and theories are not simply summaries of the available data. They are based on data but are distinct from them. 3.2 an explanation cannot simply be deduced from data, but has to be thought up creatively to account for the data. 3.3 a scienti c explanation should account for most (ideally all) of the data already known. It may explain a range of phenomena not previously thought to be linked. It should also enable predictions to be made about new situations or examples. 3.4 scienti c explanations are tested by comparing predictions based on them with data from observations or experiments. in a given account of scienti c work, identify statements which report data and statements of explanatory ideas (hypotheses, explanations, theories) recognise that an explanation may be incorrect even if the data agree with it. identify where creative thinking is involved in the development of an explanation. recognise data or observations that are accounted for by, or con ict with, an explanation give good reasons for accepting or rejecting a proposed scienti c explanation identify the better of two given scienti c explanations for a phenomenon, and give reasons for the choice. draw valid conclusions about the implications of given data for a given scienti c explanation, in particular: understand that agreement between a prediction and an observation increases con dence in the explanation on which the prediction is based but does not prove it is correct understand that disagreement between a prediction and an observation indicates that one or other is wrong, and decreases our con dence in the explanation on which the prediction is based. 12

4 4 The scienti c community Candidates should understand that: 4.1 scientists report their claims to other scientists through conferences and journals. Scienti c claims are only accepted once they have been evaluated critically by other scientists. 4.2 scientists are usually sceptical about claims that cannot be repeated by anyone else, and about unexpected ndings until they have been replicated (by themselves) or reproduced (by someone else). 4.3 if explanations cannot be deduced from the available data, two (or more) scientists may legitimately draw different conclusions about the same data. A scientist s personal background, experience or interests may in uence his/her judgments. 4.4 an accepted scienti c explanation is rarely abandoned just because some new data disagree with its predictions. It usually survives until a better explanation is available. A candidate who understands this can, for example: describe in broad outline the peer review process, in which new scienti c claims are evaluated by other scientists recognise that there is less con dence in new scienti c claims that have not yet been evaluated by the scienti c community than there is in well-established ones. identify the fact that a nding has not been reproduced by another scientist as a reason for questioning a scienti c claim explain why scientists see this as important. show awareness that the same data might be interpreted, quite reasonably, in more than one way suggest plausible reasons why scientists in a given situation disagree(d). discuss the likely consequences of new data that disagree with the predictions of an accepted explanation suggest reasons why scientists should not give up an accepted explanation immediately if new data appear to con ict with it. 13

5 Module P1: The Earth in the Universe P1.1 What do we know about the place of the Earth in the Universe? 1. recall that the Earth is one of eight planets moving in almost circular paths round the Sun which, together with other smaller objects orbiting the Sun (asteroids, dwarf planets, comets) and moons orbiting several planets, make up the solar system 2. describe the principal differences between planets, moons, the Sun, comets and asteroids, including their relative sizes and motions 3. understand that the solar system was formed over very long periods from clouds of gases and dust in space, about ve thousand million years ago 4. recall that the Sun is one of thousands of millions of stars in the Milky Way galaxy 5. recall that there are thousands of millions of galaxies, each containing thousands of millions of stars, and that all of these galaxies make up the Universe 6. put in order and recall the relative sizes of: the diameters of the Earth, the Sun, the Earth s orbit, the solar system, the Milky Way, the distance from the Sun to the nearest star, and the distance from the Milky Way to the nearest galaxy 7. understand that all the evidence we have about distant stars and galaxies comes from the radiation astronomers can detect 8. recall that light travels through space (a vacuum) at a very high but nite speed, km/s 9. recall that a light-year is the distance travelled by light in a year 10. understand that the nite speed of light means that very distant objects are observed as they were in the past, when the light we now see left them 11. understand how the distance to a star can be measured using parallax (qualitative idea only) 12. understand how the distance to a star can be estimated from its relative brightness 13. understand that light pollution and other atmospheric conditions interfere with observations of the night sky 14. explain why there are uncertainties about the distances of stars and galaxies with reference to the nature and dif culty of the observations on which these are based and the assumptions made in interpreting them 15. understand that the source of the Sun s energy is the fusion of hydrogen nuclei 16. understand that all chemical elements with atoms heavier than helium were made in stars 17. understand that the redshift in the light coming from them suggests that distant galaxies are moving away from us 18. understand that (in general) the further away a galaxy is, the faster it is moving away from us 19. understand how the motions of galaxies suggests that space itself is expanding 20. recall and put in order the relative ages of the Earth, the Sun, and the Universe 21. recall that scientists believe the Universe began with a big bang about 14 thousand million years ago 22. understand that the ultimate fate of the Universe is dif cult to predict because of dif culties in measuring the very large distances involved and the mass of the Universe, and studying the motion of very distant objects. 14

6 Module P1: The Earth in the Universe P1.2 What do we know about the Earth and how it is changing? 1. understand how rocks provide evidence for changes in the Earth (erosion and sedimentation, fossils, folding) 2. understand that continents would be worn down to sea level by erosion, if mountains were not being continuously formed 3. understand that the rock processes seen today can account for past changes 4. understand that the age of the Earth can be estimated from, and must be greater than, the age of its oldest rocks, which are about four thousand million years old 5. understand Wegener s theory of continental drift and his evidence for it (geometric t of continents and their matching fossils and rock layers) 6. understand how Wegener s theory accounts for mountain building 7. understand reasons for the rejection of Wegener s theory by geologists of his time (movement of continents not detectable, too big an idea from limited evidence, simpler explanations of the same evidence, Wegener an outsider to the community of geologists) 8. understand that sea oor spreading is a consequence of movement of the mantle (convection due to heating by the core) 9. recall that sea oors spread by a few centimetres a year 10. understand how sea oor spreading and the periodic reversals of the Earth s magnetic eld can explain the pattern in the magnetisation of sea oor rocks on either side of the oceanic ridges 11. understand that earthquakes, volcanoes and mountain building generally occur at the edges of tectonic plates 12. understand how the movement of tectonic plates causes earthquakes, volcanoes and mountain building, and contributes to the rock cycle 13. recall that earthquakes produce wave motions on the surface and inside the Earth which can be detected by instruments located on the Earth s surface 14. recall that earthquakes produce: a. P-waves (longitudinal waves) which travel through solids and liquids b. S-waves (transverse waves) which travel through solids but not liquids 15. describe the difference between a transverse and longitudinal wave 16. understand how differences in the wave speeds and behaviour of P-waves and S-waves can be used to give evidence for the structure of the Earth 17. in relation to waves, use the equation: distance = wave speed time (metres, m) (metres per second, m/s) (seconds, s) 18. draw and label a diagram of the Earth to show its crust, mantle and core 19. recall that a wave is a disturbance, caused by a vibrating source, that transfers energy in the direction that the wave travels, without transferring matter 15

7 P1.2 What do we know about the Earth and how it is changing? 20. recall that the frequency of waves, in hertz (Hz), is the number of waves each second that are made by the source, or that pass through any particular point 21. recall that the wavelength of waves is the distance between the corresponding points on two adjacent cycles 22. recall that the amplitude of a wave is the distance from the maximum displacement to the undisturbed position 23. draw and interpret diagrams showing the amplitude and the wavelength of waves 24. use the equation: wave speed = frequency wavelength (metres per second, m/s) (hertz, Hz) (metres, m) 25. understand that for a constant wave speed the wavelength of the wave is inversely proportional to the frequency. 16

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